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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

They also looked a lot like clerking in a law firm, staying up way too late, riding in the car way too much, and getting stuck overnight in the airport...but that's beside the point.

I'm not sure if the blog is going to be back in action now or not. I really like being away from technology and off the map for a while in Maine and may try to keep that up even though I'm back in Lexington. But for now, this is what I've been up to, though I doubt anyone reading this has actually been wondering.

A quote regarding many things but somewhat relevant to summer adventuring:

Thursday, May 9, 2013

So, I survived 1L. I will write about that later, but I have to actually process it first. For now, I feel like I just woke up from a long, intense dream, where all I remember is that my brain hurt a lot and the Lord is really, really good. Even now that school is out, things are still a slight whirlwind. Since my last exam on Friday I have watched my sister graduate from Asbury, attended a research seminar at school to prep me for my summer job, gone on a nice long walk in the park in the rain with the boyfriend, had a lot of hammock time, and crashed Mom's 2nd grade field trip to the Arboretum. And now, as a result of a bizarre series of events, I am leaving first thing Saturday morning to go spend the first half of the summer clerking at a law firm in the closest thing to a "hometown" I have, with my best friends nonetheless!

Cue Johnny Cash:

I am excited. Still, leaving is kind of overwhelming, and packing for a real job for 7 weeks is more ridiculous than I bargained for. But regardless of what makes sense, where the Lord leads we follow. So Jackson it is, for May and June, and then after that I am "wandering"...yeah.

Really though - this is the 23rd summer in a row I have lived out of a suitcase. Why break the streak now?

Bluegrass State, thank you for a wonderful first year welcome. Sorry that I have to leave you now that the weather finally got good and the flowers are all blooming. I'll be back as soon as I can.

Mississippi, I am not looking forward to your humidity but I have terribly missed your food, your tea, your accent, your culture, and your people. See you in 48 hours or so!

People of the Deep South, look me up the next 7 weeks. I'm excited for some time to spend with you!

Guatemala
appellate brief due
oral argument speech competition (a.k.a. Triwizard Tournament)
family in town for Easter
trying to sort out which classes to take next year
too little sleep
too many allergies
way too much snow for what this Mississippi girl considers the first month of spring
contracts and property and con law...oh my

And just like that, March is over. And now it's April 5, with two weeks until finals, and it's warm outside again, and Keeneland has started, and all I want to do is to press pause and have adventures and soak up life without an ever-ticking clock. But the clock continues to tick, and so we make the best of the time we have.

Which is why yesterday, when I was sitting in class at 1:00 and got a text that said "Hey, let's go to the Gorge," the answer had to be yes. Even though we couldn't leave until 2:30 and it takes an hour to get there and we had to be back by 7 and Turtleback Arch is an unmarked trail that's supposed to take "3 to 5 hours" to locate...

We never did make it to Turtleback Arch, but we did see Rock Bridge and jam to some Page CXVI in the car and have good conversation and make it back in time to change into formal clothes and dance the night away. And it was so, so good.

Friday, March 1, 2013

On the (rare) days I drive to school, I have the friendly UK parking garage elevators to help me remember which floor I parked on:

Helpful, considering the dozens of small details I remember (or, try to) these days:

My locker combination. Not locking the keys in the Jeep. Packing a spoon with my lunch on the days I bring yogurt. That Contracts happens on Monday/Tuesday/Thursday this semester instead of Tuesday/Thursday/Friday. These things are so much harder for me than they should be.

But while not locking my keys in the car is good, there are other things. More important things...

The book of Deuteronomy talks a lot about remembering. Remember the Lord. Remember what His laws are. Remember why His laws matter. Remember how He led you through the desert. Do not forget...

When you have eaten and are satisfied, praise the LORD your God for the good land he has given you. Be careful that you do not forget the LORD your God, failing to observe his commands, his laws and his decrees... You may say to yourself, "My power and the strength of my hands have produced this wealth for me." But remember the LORD your God, for it is he who gives you the ability to produce wealth, and so confirms his covenant, which he swore to your forefathers, as it is today... [from Deuteronomy 8:10-18]

Lately I just feel the need to remember. Last year was a big year, a blessing year. A mountaintop year. And this year is great, in so many ways, but there are things I need to remember from the mountain. Things that, while we were on the mountain, we said we would never forget...

I want to remember - and I mean vividly, deep-down-in-my-soul remember - the chaos of Mondays at the Brick House. The frantic washing of dishes. The blasting karaoke machine, the broken English, the shouting voices. The way that ice cream to make milkshakes was like manna from heaven and would always show up, somehow, from somewhere.

I want to remember the power that is in total and complete transparency. The transparency that comes at 6:30 on Friday mornings in a room full of best friends with bared souls, open bibles, and muffins. That comes on warm Sunday afternoons with brothers and sisters on blankets under Rowan Oak trees with Newks chicken salad and Mama Jo's to-go plates. That comes when love triumphs over judgment, and everyone knows it, and everyone acts on it. Weekly. Daily. Always.

I want to remember the constant encouragement. The answered prayers. The excitement, the laughter, the pain, but the joy. To remember - really, truly remember - that we were dead, but now we are alive. That we had needs, and that He met them. That someone died, on a cross, to save us. And that absolutely must change everything.

It's not that I have forgotten these things. I could never truly forget. But that's just it. You never start out thinking you're going to forget. When you leave your car on the fourth floor of the parking garage, when you see the friendly UK elevator, you assume you'll remember. But come 4:00, after a couple hours of property law, citation quizzes, and library time, that memory of where you left the car is a little bit fuzzy.

Another thing... Remembering gets a bad rep because people equate it with living in the past. That's not what I'm talking about. God didn't tell the Israelites to actually go back to the desert. He told them to remember the desert to strengthen them for the now, to keep them on track for the future. That's why remembering matters. Not so we can dwell on what was, but so we can take what was and use it to help us today and tomorrow, and the day after that.

So this is what I need to do, and I'm inviting you to do it with me. Let's take some time and think about where we've come from, where we've been. How He was more than enough. How He's always been more than enough, to everyone, always. And we can draw from the strength of those memories for whatever challenges we're facing today.

Let the Word, let your memories, let this post be your friendly UK parking garage door. Not because you've forgotten, but because we can always use the reminder.

- that this would be one of the most whirlwind months of my entire life

- the way that my heart is feeling life lately even in the midst of this being one of the most whirlwind months of my entire life. A lot of times when things get crazy, I go into autopilot. My feet take me places, my mouth speaks words, my body and hands move, but my mind and heart withdraw. But somehow lately, my mind, body, and spirit seem to be moving as one. Which is pretty exhausting, actually - to let myself feel the real weight of everything that is going on. But I like it better this way. It's kind of scary, but it's real, and, after all, there is never anything to be afraid of... Does this even make sense? This probably doesn't even make sense. And that's ok. I didn't really see myself writing that either, but keeping with the theme of the post, the stream-of-conscious rambling can stay.

The list could go on for a long time. Basically, I have no idea what is going on lately, and it's overwhelming, but it's awesome. There's a lot more I should be journalling about, and definitely some things that are blog-worthy too, but since it's moving so fast I'm obliged to just keep moving along with it. But it should slow down soon, I think. Once I get this appellate brief written. Yeah, I'm going to go work on that right now actually.

Before I go, here's some music for your Sunday afternoon. This is probably my new favorite!

Enjoy the day, friends, and celebrate this truth with me. (Also my new favorite!)

And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that in all things, at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good work.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

"In short, I had always believed that the world involved magic: now I thought that perhaps it involved a magician. And this pointed to a profound emotion always present and sub-conscious; that this world of ours has some purpose; and if there is a purpose, there is a person. I had always felt life first as a story: and if there is a story there is a story-teller..."

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Well, good. This clears things up... Any law school lovers out there that want to help a sister out with the Erie doctrine, give yours truly a shout. In the meantime, my flowchart and I will be working on it.

For the record, I do love a good flowchart. But usually ones more like this, or this. There's nothing I can say, a total eclipse of the heart...seriously, click on those two links!

It's Wednesday after 5:00 meaning we have officially begun the downhill slope towards the weekend! So go knock out Thursday, slide through Friday, and then celebrate the fact that you have once again successfully survived another week. Perhaps an enlightening flowchart of your own is in your future! But actually, yeah, you're right. Might be best to just keep those within the Beatles' hits, 80's love songs, and Civil Procedure worlds, for now at least.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Grapefruit. Avocado. These two foods will help you beat the winter blues and make you feel light and fresh again. Guarantee it. Add lots of water, a little bit of exercise, and vitamins to fend off the flu. Then mix with happy thoughts from the fall when you were actually excited at the idea of breaking out those scarves and boots, and a list of reasons why winter really is ok - e.g. hot chocolate, warm blankets, oversize sweaters, falling snow (I know it's cold, but it really does look like magic)...

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

I'm on a quote kick lately. (But aren't I always?) But also, somewhat unusually, I seem to find myself in various situations lately where I am faced with that age-old life choice: take the leap of faith or play it safe.

Sometimes I'm a risk-taker. Sometimes I am very much not a risk-taker. (Surely this is a result of being born to my mom and dad - the calculated, collected, predictable one and the risk-taker extraordinaire, respectively.) I've been trying to figure it out for years. Ole Miss made me more of a risk-taker. Law school is making me less of one. I'm not sure if I like that.

As I think on these decisions I have, the play-it-safe side is more apparent, more in my face. Be careful. Slow down. You might get hurt. Someone else might get hurt. But then there's that part of me deep down, that's always there even if it's whispering, with a question - the question - that will always and forever overpower the play-it-safe side of me. What if?

What if you go for it? Think what could be waiting. What's the worst thing that could happen? You are always safe in Me. You have nothing to fear from this world. Make the leap. Take the plunge. What are you waiting for?

Riiight. Got it. I remember now. The anticipation of things unknown usually doesn't make me afraid, it makes me excited. I just forget that sometimes. But I don't want to forget. I have to go for it. I choose to go for it, boldly. "Make your choice..." I strike the bell.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

After much adventuring, I am back in Lex. Details on all of that soon, but first, just had to acknowledge the fact that 2012, the year of all things, has officially come and gone. In all of the planning I had done for my entire life up to this point, I never made it past 2012. I guess even from middle school I was predicting the whole Mayan apocalypse thing. But just look where we are now.

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you see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, christ died for the ungodly. very rarely will anyone die for a righteous man, though for a good man someone might possibly dare to die. but god demonstrates his own love for us in this - while we were still sinners, christ died for us. [romans 5:6-8]

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